English-Thai Dictionary
hurt
ADJ ซึ่ง เจ็บปวด ที่ บาดเจ็บ ที่ เป็นทุกข์ sueng-jeb-puad
hurt
N การทำร้าย การ ทำอันตราย การ ทำลาย ความปวดร้าว ความเสียใจ ความเจ็บปวด ความเสียหาย อาการ เจ็บปวด kan-tam-rai
hurt
VI ทำให้ เจ็บปวด เจ็บ ปวด บอบช้ำ tam-hai-jeb-puad
hurt
VI ทำให้ เสียใจ ทำร้าย (จิตใจ ทำร้ายจิตใจ ทำอันตราย tam-hai-sia-jai
hurt by
VT น้อยใจ noi-jai
hurtful
ADJ น้อยใจ noi-jai
hurtfully
ADV อย่างน้อยใจ yang-noi-jai
hurting
N ซึ่ง ทำร้าย ซึ่ง เบียดเบียน sueng-tam-rai
hurtle
VT กระแทก โยน พุ่ง kra-teak
hurtleberry
N ต้นไม้ หรือ ผลไม้ จาก ต้น ไม้พุ่ม พวก Vaccinium Mystillus whortleberry
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
HURT
v.t.pret. and pp. hurt. 1. To bruise; to give pain by a contusion, pressure, or any violence to the body. We hurt the body by a severe blow, or by tight clothes, and the feet by fetters. Psalm 1 5:18.
2. To wound; to injure or impair the sound state of the body, as by incision or fracture.
3. To harm; to damage; to injure by occasioning loss. We hurt a man by destroying his property.
4. To injure by diminution; to impair.
A man hurts his estate by extravagance.
5. To injure by reducing in quality; to impair the strength, purity or beauty of.
Hurt not the wine and the oil-- Revelation 6:6.
6. To harm; to injure; to damage, in general.
7. To wound; to injure; to give pain to; as, to hurt the feelings.
HURT
n.A wound; a bruise; any thing that gives pain to the body. The pains of sickness and hurts.
1. Harm; mischief; injury.
I have slain a man to my wounding, and a young man to my hurt. Genesis 4:23.
2. Injury; loss.
Why should damage grow to the hurt of the kings? Ezra 4:22.
HURTER
n.One who hurts or does harm.
HURTERS
n.Pieces of wood at the lower end of a platform, to prevent the wheels of gun-carriages from injuring the parapet.
HURTFUL
a.Injurious; mischievous; occasioning loss or destruction; tending to impair or destroy. Negligence is hurtful to property; intemperance is hurtful to health.
HURTFULLY
adv. Injuriously; ; mischievously.
HURTFULNESS
n.Injuriousness; tendency to occasion loss or destruction; mischievousness.
HURTLE
v.i.[from hurt. ] To clash or run against; to jostle; to skirmish; to meet in shock and encounter; to wheel suddenly. [Not now used. ]
HURTLE
v.t.To move with violence or impetuosity. 1. To push forcibly; to whirl.
HURTLEBERRY
n.A whortleberry, which see.
HURTLESS
a.Harmless; innocent; doing no injury; innoxious; as hurtless blows. 1. Receiving no injury.
HURTLESSLY
adv. Without harm. [Little used. ]
HURTLESSNESS
n.Freedom from any harmful quality. [Little used. ]
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
HURT
HURT Hurt, n. (Mach. )(a ) A band on a trip-hammer helve, bearing the trunnions. (b ) A husk. See Husk, 2.
HURT
Hurt, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Hurt; p. pr. & vb. n. Hurting. ] Etym: [OE. hurten, hirten, horten, herten; prob. fr. OF. hurter, heurter, to knock, thrust, strike, F. heurter; cf. W. hyrddu to push, drive, assault, hwrdd a stroke, blow, push; also, a ram, the orig. sense of the verb thus perhaps being, to butt as a ram; cf. D. horten to push, strike, MHG. hurten, both prob. fr. Old French. ]
1. To cause physical pain to; to do bodily harm to; to wound or bruise painfully. The hurt lion groans within his den. Dryden.
2. To impar the value, usefulness, beauty, or pleasure of; to damage; to injure; to harm. Virtue may be assailed, but never hurt. Milton.
3. To wound the feelings of; to cause mental pain to; to offend in honor or self-respect; to annoy; to grieve. "I am angry and hurt. " Thackeray.
HURTER
HURTER Hurt "er, n.
1. A bodily injury causing pain; a wound, bruise, or the like. The pains of sickness and hurts... all men feel. Locke.
2. An injury causing pain of mind or conscience; a slight; a stain; as of sin. But the jingling of the guinea helps the hurt that Honor feels. Tennyson.
3. Injury; damage; detriment; harm; mischief. Thou dost me yet but little hurt. Shak.
Syn. -- Wound; bruise; injury; harm; damage; loss; detriment; mischief; bane; disadvantage.
HURTER
HURTER Hurt "er, n.
Defn: One who hurts or does harm. I shall not be a hurter, if no helper. Beau. & Fl.
HURTER
Hurt "er, n. Etym: [F. heurtoir, lit. , a striker. See Hurt, v. t.]
Defn: A butting piece; a strengthening piece, esp. : (Mil. ) A piece of wood at the lower end of a platform, designed to prevent the wheels of gun carriages from injuring the parapet.
HURTFUL
HURTFUL Hurt "ful, a.
Defn: Tending to impair or damage; injurious; mischievous; occasioning loss or injury; as, hurtful words or conduct.
Syn. -- Pernicious; harmful; baneful; prejudicial; detrimental; disadvantageous; mischievous; injurious; noxious; unwholesome; destructive. -- Hurt "ful *ly, adv. -- Hurt "ful *ness, n.
HURTLE
Hur "tle, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Hurtled; p. pr. & vb. n. Hurtling.]Etym: [OE. hurtlen, freq. of hurten. See Hurt, v. t., and cf. Hurl. ]
1. To meet with violence or shock; to clash; to jostle. Together hurtled both their steeds. Fairfax.
2. To move rapidly; to wheel or rush suddenly or with violence; to whirl round rapidly; to skirmish. Now hurtling round, advantage for to take. Spenser. Down the hurtling cataract of the ages. R. L. Stevenson.
3. To make a threatening sound, like the clash of arms; to make a sound as of confused clashing or confusion; to resound. The noise of battle hurtled in the air. Shak. The earthquake sound Hurtling 'death the solid ground. Mrs. Browning.
HURTLE
HURTLE Hur "tle, v. t.
1. To move with violence or impetuosity; to whirl; to brandish. [Obs. ] His harmful club he gan to hurtle high. Spenser.
2. To push; to jostle; to hurl. And he hurtleth with his horse adown. Chaucer.
HURTLEBERRY
Hur "tle *ber `ry, n. Etym: [Cf. Huckleberry, Whortleberry. ]
Defn: See Whortleberry.
HURTLESS
HURTLESS Hurt "less, a.
Defn: Doing no injury; harmless; also, unhurt; without injury or harm. Gentle dame so hurtless and so true. Spenser. -- Hurt "less *ly, adv. -- Hurt "less *ness, n.
New American Oxford Dictionary
hurt
hurt |hərt hərt | ▶verb ( past and past participle hurt ) [ with obj. ] cause physical pain or injury to: Ow! You're hurting me! | [ no obj. ] : does acupuncture hurt? • [ no obj. ] (of a part of the body ) suffer pain: my back hurts. • cause mental pain or distress to (a person or their feelings ): she didn't want to hurt his feelings. • [ no obj. ] (of a person ) feel mental pain or distress: he was hurting badly, but he smiled through his tears. • be detrimental to: high interest rates are hurting the local economy. • [ no obj. ] (hurt for ) informal have a pressing need for: Frank wasn't hurting for money. ▶noun physical injury; harm. • mental pain or distress: the hurt of being constantly ignored | wariness that masked a hurt. ORIGIN Middle English (originally in the senses ‘to strike ’ and ‘a blow ’): from Old French hurter (verb ), hurt (noun ), perhaps ultimately of Germanic origin.
hurtful
hurt ful |ˈhərtfəl ˈhərtfəl | ▶adjective causing distress to someone's feelings: his hurtful remarks. DERIVATIVES hurt ful ly adverb, hurt ful ness noun
hurtle
hur tle |ˈhərtl ˈhərdl | ▶verb move or cause to move at a great speed, typically in a wildly uncontrolled manner: [ no obj., with adverbial of direction ] : a runaway car hurtled toward them | [ with obj. and adverbial of direction ] : the branch flew off and hurtled us into a ditch. ORIGIN Middle English (in the sense ‘strike against, collide with ’): frequentative of hurt .
Oxford Dictionary
hurt
hurt |həːt | ▶verb ( past and past participle hurt ) [ with obj. ] 1 cause pain or injury to: Ow! You're hurting me! | [ no obj. ] : does acupuncture hurt? • [ no obj. ] (of a part of the body ) suffer pain: my back hurts. • cause distress to: she didn't want to hurt his feelings. • [ no obj. ] (of a person ) feel distress: he was hurting badly, but he smiled through his tears. 2 be detrimental to: high interest rates are hurting the local economy. 3 [ no obj. ] (hurt for ) N. Amer. informal have a pressing need for: Frank wasn't hurting for money. ▶noun [ mass noun ] physical injury; harm. • mental pain or distress: her eyes reflected her unhappiness and hurt | [ count noun ] : it's time to forgive past hurts and open your heart. DERIVATIVES hurty adjective ( hurtier, hurtiest ) ( informal )ORIGIN Middle English (originally in the senses ‘to strike ’ and ‘a blow ’): from Old French hurter (verb ), hurt (noun ), perhaps ultimately of Germanic origin.
hurtful
hurt |ful |ˈhəːtfʊl, -f (ə )l | ▶adjective causing distress to someone's feelings: his hurtful remarks. DERIVATIVES hurtfully adverb, hurtfulness noun
hurtle
hur ¦tle |ˈhəːt (ə )l | ▶verb move or cause to move at high speed, typically in an uncontrolled manner: [ no obj., with adverbial of direction ] : a runaway car hurtled towards them | [ with obj. and adverbial of direction ] : the trucks hurtled them through the grassland to the construction sites. ORIGIN Middle English (in the sense ‘strike against, collide with ’): frequentative of hurt .
American Oxford Thesaurus
hurt
hurt verb 1 my back hurts: be painful, be sore, be tender, cause pain, cause discomfort; ache, smart, sting, burn, throb; informal be killing (one ). 2 Dad hurt his leg: injure, wound, damage, abuse, disable, incapacitate, maim, mutilate, wrench; bruise, cut, gash, graze, scrape, scratch, lacerate. ANTONYMS heal. 3 his words hurt her: distress, pain, wound, sting, upset, sadden, devastate, grieve, mortify; cut to the quick. ANTONYMS please, comfort. 4 high interest rates are hurting the economy: harm, damage, be detrimental to, weaken, blight, impede, jeopardize, undermine, ruin, wreck, sabotage, cripple. ANTONYMS improve, benefit. ▶noun she apologized for the hurt she had caused: distress, pain, suffering, injury, grief, misery, anguish, agony, trauma, woe, upset, sadness, sorrow; harm, damage, trouble. ANTONYMS joy. ▶adjective 1 my hurt hand: injured, wounded, bruised, grazed, cut, gashed, battered, sore, painful, aching, smarting, throbbing. ANTONYMS healed. 2 Anne's hurt expression: pained, injured, distressed, anguished, upset, sad, mortified, offended; informal miffed, peeved, sore. ANTONYMS pleased.
hurtful
hurtful adjective the effects of hurtful remarks may last a lifetime: upsetting, distressing, wounding, painful, injurious; unkind, cruel, nasty, mean, malicious, spiteful, vindictive; cutting, barbed, poisonous; informal catty, bitchy.
hurtle
hurtle verb they hurtled out of the classroom and into the gymnasium: speed, rush, run, race, sprint, bolt, dash, career, charge, careen, shoot, streak, flash, gallop, fly, scurry, go like the wind; informal belt, tear, scoot, whiz, zoom, go like a bat out of hell, hightail it, barrel.
Oxford Thesaurus
hurt
hurt verb 1 my back hurts: be painful, be sore, be tender, cause pain, cause discomfort, ache, smart, sting, burn, tingle, throb; informal be killing, be playing up. ANTONYMS be healed. 2 Dad had hurt his leg: injure, wound, damage, disable, incapacitate, impair, maim, mutilate, cause injury to, cause pain to; bruise, cut, gash, graze, scrape, scratch, lacerate; abuse, torture, maltreat, ill-treat, molest. ANTONYMS heal. 3 his cruel words hurt her deeply: distress, pain, wound, offend, sting, upset, sadden, devastate, mortify, grieve, aggrieve, be hurtful to, hurt someone's feelings, cause sorrow, cause suffering, cause anguish, make unhappy, give offence to, cut to the quick. ANTONYMS please; comfort. 4 high interest rates are hurting the local economy: harm, damage, do harm to, be detrimental to, weaken, spoil, mar, blemish, blight, impair, impede, jeopardize, undermine, ruin, wreck, sabotage, cripple; informal foul up. ANTONYMS benefit, improve. ▶noun 1 rolling properly into a fall minimizes hurt | he rubbed the hurt on his chin: harm, injury, wounding, pain, suffering, discomfort, soreness, aching, smarting, stinging, throbbing, pangs; bruise, graze, scrape, cut, gash, scratch, laceration. 2 she loved him, in spite of all the hurt he had caused her: distress, pain, suffering, grief, misery, anguish, torment, trauma, woe, upset, sadness, sorrow, wretchedness; harm, damage, injury, trouble, misfortune, affliction, wrong, detriment, disadvantage; informal mischief. ANTONYMS joy. ▶adjective 1 the doctor looked at my hurt hand: injured, wounded, bruised, grazed, scratched, cut, gashed, lacerated, sore, painful, aching, burning, smarting, throbbing. ANTONYMS healed. 2 Anne's hurt expression spoke volumes: pained, distressed, aggrieved, displeased, disgruntled, anguished, resentful, offended, piqued, upset, sad, saddened, sorrowful, grief-stricken; informal miffed, peeved, narked, browned off, hacked off; Brit. informal cheesed off; N. Amer. informal sore; vulgar slang pissed off. ANTONYMS pleased.
hurtful
hurtful adjective 1 hurtful words: upsetting, distressing, wounding, painful; unkind, cruel, nasty, mean, malicious, spiteful, snide, acerbic, cutting, biting, barbed, vicious, offensive; informal catty, bitchy; Brit. informal sarky; N. Amer. informal snarky; rare acidulous, mordacious. ANTONYMS pleasant; comforting. 2 such a move would be hurtful to the interests of women: detrimental, harmful, damaging, injurious, disadvantageous, unfavourable, prejudicial, baleful, deleterious, destructive, disastrous, pernicious, ruinous, inimical; literary malefic, maleficent; rare baneful, prejudicious. ANTONYMS beneficial.
hurtle
hurtle verb a runaway car hurtled towards them: speed, rush, race, chase, bolt, bowl, dash, career, careen, cannon, sweep, whizz, buzz, zoom, flash, blast, charge, shoot, streak, run, gallop, stampede, hare, fly, wing, scurry, scud, go like the wind; informal belt, pelt, tear, scoot, tool, zap, zip, whip, burn rubber, go like a bat out of hell; Brit. informal bomb, bucket, shift, go like the clappers; N. Amer. informal clip, boogie, hightail, barrel; archaic post, hie. ANTONYMS go slowly.
Duden Dictionary
Hurtigkeit
Hur tig keit Substantiv, feminin , die |H u rtigkeit |
Spanish Dictionary
hurta
hurta nombre femenino Pez marino teleósteo perciforme, con el cuerpo oval, de hasta 1 cm de longitud, de color rosa vinoso punteado de azul .
hurtadillas
hurtadillas Palabra que se usa en la locución adverbial a hurtadillas , que indica que algo se hace de manera secreta para no ser visto por otras personas :en estos momentos me parecía que alguna persona me miraba o me seguía a hurtadillas, o que me iba a cortar el paso .
hurtar
hurtar verbo transitivo 1 Quitar a una persona algo que le pertenece con ánimo de lucro, sin utilizar para ello la violencia o la intimidación :la compañía no se hace responsable de los efectos hurtados o sustraídos en sus instalaciones .2 Desviar o apartar una cosa que estorba :el delantero hurtó el cuerpo y evitó la agresión; (fig ) esta cuestión no puede ser hurtada a la opinión pública .
hurto
hurto nombre masculino 1 Acción de hurtar :el hurto es un delito menos grave que el robo .2 Cosa hurtada :escondió su hurto en el bolsillo .
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
hurt
hurt /həː r t / (! -ur-は /əː r /) 〖語源は 「ぶつかる 」〗動詞 ~s /-ts /; ~; ~ing 他動詞 1 〈人 物 事が 〉〈人 体など 〉を傷つける , …にけがをさせる [する ] (!外傷だけでなく痛みを伴う; →injure , wound 1 ) ▸ hurt oneself けがをする ▸ Loud noise hurt my ears .大音量で耳が痛くなった ▸ I heard Dean was seriously [badly ] hurt in a car accident .ディーンは車の事故で重傷を負ったそうだ .2 a. 〈言葉などが 〉〈人 〉の感情を傷つける , …を不快にする ; 〈気分 〉を害する ▸ Keith was [felt ] really [deeply ] hurt .キースはひどく傷ついた ▸ His ingratitude hurts me .彼の恩知らずには腹がたつ ▸ He didn't want [mean ] to hurt her feelings .彼は彼女の気持ちを害したく [害するつもりは ]なかった b. 〖it won't [wouldn't, doesn't ] ~ A to do 〗…するのはA 〈人など 〉にとってたいしたことではない , 問題にはならない ▸ It won't hurt you to clean up your room now and then .時々自分の部屋をそうじするくらいどうということもあるまい (!「だから …せよ 」という意味合いがある ) 3 〈物 事が 〉〈人 物など 〉に損害を与える (damage ); …を妨害する ▸ The wildlife will be hurt by this development .野生動物はこの開発により打撃を受けるだろう ▸ hurt one's reputation 評判をそこなう 自動詞 1 〈体の一部が 〉痛む , 痛い (→ache 1 ); 〈物が 〉 (身体に )痛みを与える ▸ “Where does it hurt ?” “My back hurts when I bend over. ”「どこが痛みますか 」「かがむと背中が痛いんです 」▸ hurt like hell たまらなく痛い ▸ My ring hurts .指輪が痛い .2 a. 〈物 事が 〉感情を傷つける , 不快にさせる ▸ What really hurt was that she never appreciated what I did .本当に傷ついたのは, 私がしたことに彼女が決して感謝しなかったことだ b. 〖it won't [wouldn't, doesn't ] ~ to do 〗…するのはたいしたことではない , 問題ではない (↑他動詞 2b ); 〖it ~s to do 〗…するのは心が傷む .3 ⦅米 くだけて ⦆〖be ~ing 〗〈人が 〉傷ついている , 気分を害している ▸ I know you're hurting but …君が傷ついているのはわかるけど …4 ⦅米話 ⦆〖be ~ing 〗〈組織などが 〉【金 大事なものなどを 】ひどく必要としている , 欠いている «for » .be (only [just ]) h ú rting one s è lf 自分をなおみじめにするだけだ, 自分の置かれた状況を悪くするだけだ .one m ò re won't h ú rt ⦅話 ⦆(食べ物 酒などを勧めて )もう1つ [1杯 ]くらいいけるでしょう ; どうぞもう1つ [1杯 ].A won't [doesn't ] h ú rt ⦅話 ⦆Aはいい考えだ, Aするのがよい .形容詞 1 〖通例be /get ~〗けがをした, (身体が )傷ついた ▸ The pilot was [got ] badly hurt .パイロットは重傷を負った 2 気分を害した, (精神的に )傷ついた ▸ She gave me a hurt look .彼女は気分を害した顔を私に見せた 3 〈品物などが 〉傷のある , 破損して .名詞 1 C U 〖通例単数形で 〗(心の )傷 , 痛み ; (精神的 )苦痛 ; «…に対する » 損害 , 害 «to » ▸ It was a hurt that would take years to heal .それは癒 (い ) やすのに何年もかかるような痛みだった 2 C けが , 傷 ; (身体の )痛み .
hurtful
h ú rt ful 形容詞 1 感情を傷つける ▸ say hurtful things 人の心を傷つけるようなことを言う .2 «…に » 有害な «to » ▸ Watching television is hurtful to your eyes .テレビを観るのは目によくない .~ly 副詞 ~ness 名詞
hurtle
hur tle /hə́ː r t (ə )l /動詞 自動詞 1 (制御不可能なほど )突進する ; ビュンと飛ぶ ▸ The train hurtled through the station .列車は猛烈な勢いで駅を通過した 2 «…に » ドンと衝突する «against » .他動詞 …を乱暴に投げる .名詞 U 衝突 (音 ); 投げること [音 ].